Course of retinogeniculate projection fibers in the cat optic nerve
- 15 September 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Comparative Neurology
- Vol. 251 (3) , 376-387
- https://doi.org/10.1002/cne.902510308
Abstract
The fiber courses of the cat optic nerve were studied by using wheat germ agglutinin conjugated to horseadish peroxidase (WGA-HRP), which was iontophoretically applied to electrophysiologically defined positions in the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN). Grossly, there were two distinct bends along the legth of the optic nerve. The ventrally flexing anterior bend was located approximately 2 mm from the eyeball, while the dorsally flexing posterior bend was found at some 6 mm distant. The optic nerve fibers showed a tendency to scatter toward the chiasm. At the optic nerve head, the fibers from the different retinal areas maintained the retinal topography in a simpligfied form according to the trajectory of optic fibers surrounding the optic disc. Between the anterior and posterior bends, the fibers from the pericentral, middle-temporal, and most upper areas of the dorsal retina migrated ventrally and were arranged in the middle of the lateral, middle, and medial parts of the optic nerve, respectively, while fibers from the middle-temporal area of the ventral retina migrated dorsally and scattered into the lateral half. The fibers from the temporal and nasal horizontal meridian areas tended to hold their respective positions in the lateral and medial halves of the optic nerve. As a result, in this level they displayed a complex retinotopy in that the fibers from each part of the retina were mixed. Passing the posterior bend, as the optic nerve proceeded toward the chiasm, the characteristic pattern became less defined. Near the chiasm, the retinotopy became very scattered, showing a partial dorsoventral inversion of the retinal topography with substantial overlapping. It was noted from the present findings that the fibers from ventral retina scattered more quickly than the fibers from the dorsal retina, which tended to hold their grouping until the anterior bend, but the central or pericentral retinal fibers proceeded without significant scatter as far as the posterior bend. The analysis of labelled ganglion cells suggested that even if fibers that arise from one certain “mode” of ganglion cells are selected, it is unlikely that they maintain their initial fiber topography along the entire length of the optic nerve.Keywords
This publication has 41 references indexed in Scilit:
- The organization of retinal projections to the diencephalon and pretectum in the cichlid fish,Haplochromis burtoniJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1985
- Organization of the cat's optic tract as assessed by single‐axon recordingsJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1984
- Evidence for an orderly arrangement of optic axons within the optic nerves of the major nonmammalian vertebrate classesJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1983
- Studies of retinal representations within the cat's optic tractJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1982
- Retinogeniculate Terminations in Cats: Morphological Differences Between X and Y Cell AxonsScience, 1982
- The retinal projection to the thalamus in the cat: A quantitative investigation and a comparison with the retinotectal pathwayJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1981
- A demonstration of several independent, partially overlapping, retinotopic maps in the optic tract of the catBrain Research, 1981
- Retinotopic analysis of fiber pathways in amphibians. I. The adult newt Cynops pyrrhogasterBrain Research, 1981
- A new specific, sensitive and non-carcinogenic reagent for the demonstration of horseradish peroxidaseJournal of Molecular Histology, 1977
- The distribution of the alpha type of ganglion cells in the cat's retinaJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1975